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Feeling Like a Kid: Childhood and Children's Literature by Jerry Griswold
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Feeling Like a Kid: Childhood and Children's Literature

by Jerry Griswold

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Felling Like a Kid is essentially a literary look at children’s psychology. Griswold distills children’s literature into its 5 key component parts: snugness, scariness, smallness, lightness, and aliveness. In each chapter, he pries apart the importance of these essences and what they mean to children. He also distinguishes between the good and bad of each: while scariness is good, it’s only in jest and when we know where safety is. He uses some of the best examples of children’s literature (and some examples of adult literature that has been commandeered by children’s lit, like Gulliver’s Travels) to demonstrate each concept. Peter Pan is lightness, Pinocchio aliveness, the Borrowers smallness, and Struwwelpeter scariness. Each example is clear and artfully expounded upon and stories from many cultures are woven together to show the common threads that exist in all children’s stories. His book emphasizes the need for a separate class of literature--well-written, artfully crafted, and wholly different from adult literature—that allows children to use fantasy to make sense of their worlds. He also uses this book to warn against fluffy and censored children’s stories that are devoid of danger and conflict. How can Hansel and Gretel be heroes without the villain of the witch, after all?
A great strength of this book is the author’s use of illustrations from children’s literature generously interspersed through the book. The book is well-researched and an excellent jumping-off point for the study of children’s literature or child psychology, as the unique needs of children are considered as their stories are dissected.
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  kaelirenee | Jul 14, 2008 |
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0801885175, Hardcover)

In this engaging and reflective essay, Jerry Griswold examines the unique qualities of childhood experience and their reappearance as frequent themes in children's literature. Surveying dozens of classic and popular works for the young -- from Heidi and The Wizard of Oz to Beatrix Potter and Harry Potter -- Griswold demonstrates how great children's writers succeed because of their uncanny ability to remember what it feels like to be a kid: playing under tables, shivering in bed on a scary night, arranging miniature worlds with toys, zooming around as caped superheroes, listening to dolls talk.

No softheaded discussion of kids' "cute" convictions nor a developmentally-focused critique of their "immature" beliefs, Feeling Like a Kid boldly and honestly identifies the ways in which the young think and see the world in a manner different from that of adults. Written by a leading scholar, prize-winning author, and frequent contributor to the Los Angeles Times, this extensively illustrated book will fascinate general readers as well as all those who study childhood and children's literature.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:19 -0400)

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